Abstract

ABSTRACT The study aims to characterize the structural features of Jordanian tar sand using analytical techniques including (FTIR, ultimate and proximate analysis, TGA, XRD, and XRF). The tar sand shows a low content of volatile matter (bitumen) with significant nitrogen content. The bitumen contains a high proportion of aliphatic hydrocarbons of which high content of it attached to oxygen atom. The minerals were mainly quartz and low concentration of carbonate with noticeable content of sulfite and potassium oxide from XRF. The recovery of bitumen was evaluated using three different extraction techniques: solvent extraction methods (ultrasound-assisted extraction, non-aqueous extraction) and thermal pyrolysis using the Fischer assay apparatus. The non-aqueous solvent extraction method gave the highest bitumen recovery using toluene as a solvent; however, the high-temperature Fischer assay method provided a low recovery. The extracted bitumen under the optimum condition was characterized using NMR, elemental analysis, and GC-MS analysis. The oil products from tar sand showed a high concentration of oxygen and noticeable concentration of sulfur atoms. The 1H-NMR revealed a high content of aliphatic hydrocarbons in good agreement with raw tar sand characteristics. The identified compounds in the GC-MS where mainly substituted with oxygen atom in the form of alcohols and ethers.

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